As our estrogen hormone levels become erratic during perimenopause and decline into post menopause recovery days may be one of the most important things we can do for our health.
Yoga and intentional recovery practices don’t just help you feel relaxed in the moment. They create measurable physiological changes in the body that support your nervous system, lower stress hormones like cortisol, improve sleep quality, and help you feel more emotionally steady and energized throughout the day.
For many women especially, constantly operating in a high-stress, high-output state can leave the body feeling depleted, inflamed, anxious, and exhausted. Recovery helps restore balance.
The Stress Response: What Cortisol Is Actually Doing
Cortisol is often called the “stress hormone,” but it’s not inherently bad. Your body needs cortisol to wake up in the morning, regulate blood sugar, manage inflammation, and respond to challenges. The problem comes when stress becomes chronic.
When your nervous system perceives ongoing stress — whether from work, intense exercise, poor sleep, emotional overload, under-eating, or constantly being “on” — cortisol can remain elevated for too long. Over time, chronically high cortisol levels are associated with:
- Poor sleep quality
- Increased anxiety and irritability
- Fatigue and burnout
- Increased abdominal fat storage
- Muscle breakdown
- Hormonal imbalances
- Increased inflammation
- Difficulty recovering from workouts
Your body was designed to move between stress and recovery. But many people stay stuck in “fight or flight” mode all day long.
This is where yoga and recovery practices become incredibly powerful.
How Yoga Helps Calm the Nervous System
One of yoga’s greatest benefits of practicing yoga is how it helps us out of the sympathetic nervous system (fight-or-flight mode) and into the parasympathetic nervous system (rest-and-digest mode).
Gentle movement, slower breathing, mindfulness, and longer holds can help signal safety to the nervous system and encourage the body to shift into a more restorative state. Research suggests yoga may help lower cortisol levels, improve mood and sleep quality, and reduce symptoms of stress and anxiety.
Breathwork plays a major role in this process. Slow, controlled breathing stimulates the vagus nerve, which helps regulate the nervous system and creates a calming effect throughout the body. That’s why many people notice they feel mentally clearer, emotionally steadier, and physically lighter after yoga even if the class itself wasn’t intense.
Yoga also improves body awareness. Many of us spend so much time disconnected from how we actually feel that we miss the early signs of stress and burnout. Recovery practices help you slow down long enough to notice tension patterns, shallow breathing, fatigue, or emotional overwhelm before they escalate.
Recovery Improves Sleep – And Better Sleep Helps (Just About) Everything
Gentle yoga and restorative movement may improve both sleep quality and sleep duration. Recovery practices help reduce physical tension, quiet mental overstimulation, and prepare the body for deeper rest.
And better sleep improves:
- Energy levels
- Mood
- Metabolism
- Muscle recovery
- Hormone health
- Immune function
- Cognitive performance
If you’ve been feeling exhausted but wired, restless at night, emotionally reactive, or constantly tense, your nervous system may be asking for more recovery.
Simple Ways to Start Supporting Your Nervous System Today
1. Add 10 Minutes of Gentle Movement
Even a short yoga flow or mobility session can help reduce physical tension and improve circulation. Focus on slow, intentional movement rather than intensity. Try this 10 minute flow.
2. Practice Slower Breathing
Try inhaling for 4 counts and exhaling for 6 counts for a few minutes. Longer exhales help signal safety to the nervous system.
3. Create a Recovery Evening Routine
Dim lights, reduce screen time, stretch gently, or do restorative yoga before bed to help improve sleep quality.
4. Schedule Recovery Like a Workout
Add yoga, mobility, walking, or stretching into your weekly routine intentionally.
5. Learn to Listen to Your Body
Fatigue, irritability, poor sleep, soreness, and emotional overwhelm are often signs your body needs restoration.
A Sustainable Approach to Wellness
At Flostate Fitness, we believe movement should help you feel better in your body.
If you’ve been feeling stressed, tense, exhausted, or disconnected from your body, this is your reminder to take the time to breathe, slow down and care for yourself. If you are looking for structure to guide you, our 30-Day Yoga Program may be what you are looking for.
Our 30-Day Yoga Challenge is designed to help you create consistency with movement, improve flexibility and mobility, calm your nervous system, and feel more grounded physically and mentally. Whether you’re brand new to yoga or returning to your mat, it’s a simple and supportive way to prioritize recovery and reconnect with yourself.
No matter where you are in your fitness and wellness journey, Flostate is here to help you along the path. Join our 14 day free trial membership to give us a test run and see what you think. Cancel anytime – no strings attached. Learn more about the 14-Day Free Trial!
